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Banks to clear cheques within few hours from Oct 4: RBI

Banks to clear cheques within few hours from Oct 4: RBI

Time of India5 days ago
Reserve Bank of India will launch a faster cheque clearing system. This new system aims to clear cheques within hours. The current process takes up to two working days. The new system will use continuous clearing. Phase 1 starts on October 4, 2025. Phase 2 begins on January 3, 2026. Banks must inform customers about these changes.
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Mumbai: The RBI will introduce a new mechanism from October 4 for clearance of cheques within hours of being presented to banks, reducing the current time period of up to two working days.Cheques will be scanned, presented, and passed in a few hours and on a continuous basis during business hours. The clearing cycle will be reduced from the present T+1 days to a few hours. Cheque Truncation System (CTS) currently processes cheques with a clearing cycle of up to two working days.To improve the efficiency of cheque clearing and reduce settlement risk for participants, and to enhance customer experience, the RBI has decided to transition CTS from the current approach of batch processing to continuous clearing with 'on-realisation-settlement'.The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has issued a circular for introduction of Continuous Clearing and Settlement on Realisation in CTS."It has been decided to transition CTS to continuous clearing and settlement on realisation in two phases. Phase 1 shall be implemented on October 4, 2025 and Phase 2 on January 3, 2026," it said.There will be a single presentation session from 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM.Cheques received by the branches shall be scanned and sent to the clearing house by the banks immediately and continuously during the presentation session, RBI said."For every cheque presented, the drawee bank shall generate either positive confirmation (for honoured cheques) or negative confirmation (for dishonoured cheques)," it said.During Phase 1 (from October 4, 2025 to January 2, 2026), drawee banks will be required to confirm (positively/negatively) cheques presented on them, latest by the end of the confirmation session (7:00 PM), else those will be deemed to have been approved and included for settlement.In Phase 2 (from January 3, 2026), the item expiry time of cheques shall be changed to T+3 clear hours.Giving an example, the RBI said the cheques received by drawee banks between 10:00 AM and 11:00 AM will have to be confirmed positively or negatively by them by 2:00 PM (3 hours from 11:00 AM).Cheques for which confirmation is not provided by the drawee bank in the prescribed 3 hours shall be treated as deemed approved and included for settlement at 2:00 PM.RBI further said that on completion of settlement, the clearing house will release the information of positive and negative confirmations to the presenting bank."The presenting bank shall process the same and release the payment to the customers immediately, but not later than 1 hour from successful settlement, subject to usual safeguards," it said.RBI directed banks to make their customers adequately aware of the changes in the cheque clearing process.Banks have also been asked to be in readiness to participate in continuous clearing in CTS on the prescribed dates.
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Reality check: Look for these 3 red flags going ahead: Sunil Subramaniam
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Sunil Subramaniam, Market Expert, talks about three red flags we should be aware of. The first red flag is a very contrarian one. The inflation is coming down and that is good from a rate cut, good from RBI but for the rural economy, if food prices come down, the money in their hands is going to be down. If this inflation stays low, India's nominal GDP will come down to around 9% from the 10% that we expect in the Budget. The stock market relates to nominal GDP. So Subramaniam does not want this low inflation to persist and prefers a decent 3-4% inflation. The second red flag is the Rs 1 lakh crore that people got in the Budget are being saved rather than being used for consumption. If savings does not convert into some spending, companies' earnings are going to disappoint. The third flag is a Fed rate cut may push RBI to go for another 25 or 50 bps rate cut. Another 50 bps rate cut will signify that the RBI is worried about India's growth prospects. 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From that perspective, you realise that this has come after the announcement of the tariffs which means that the bad news of the tariffs on the economy and everything they have taken into account with the confidence that the fiscal plus the monetary policy will take adequate action to compensate for whatever the loss is due to tariff. It is a very forward-looking rating to have come out at this point. Just after the RBI governor had stated that growth is fine, the tariffs came and hit us. One would have worried whether the rating is going to get impacted by the tariff, but this has come after the tariff announcement. I would say that it is a big thumbs up to the way they see our country managing and they think we can handle the tariff situation. Second, this rating upgrade is from an investor sentiment. 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They are still not showing the inclination to spend the money that the government is giving to them. This festival season is a big examination for that. In this exam, if people do not switch into consumption, unless there are mode changes to buying, it is not going to be good from a stock market earnings perspective because just saving everything means that the mutual funds will go on buying and the valuations will remain high unless the growth comes and justifies it. If savings does not convert into some spending, earnings are going to third red flag is that if the Fed does a rate cut – and there is a 95% probability of a September rate cut – the pressure on RBI to do another rate cut is there. If the RBI goes for a further 25 basis points rate cut, that is okay. But if they show a 50 basis points rate cut, it is a red flag for me. Why? Because that means RBI is worried about growth. I do not want that to happen. The market prays for more and more rate cuts. Yes, it is a short-term bump up the market will get. But long-term, if the RBI is going for a 50 bps rate cut, it means there are some worrying signs on the growth side. The pharma sector is also seeing signs of volatility. Pharma is not just a sector but it has sub-sectors in it where we talk about healthcare, diagnostic, laboratory, CDMO, hospital. Is this dip an opportunity to enter or is this volatility rather an opportunity to enter? Sunil Subramaniam: The big fear is what Mr Trump is talking about, that tariff on pharma will ultimately go to 250% or alternatively putting pressure on the pharma companies to reduce prices which means it will be at the cost of margins. So, that is the one big uncertainty which is affecting pharma because the earning season for pharma has been fairly decent. So, to that extent I would suggest a balanced approach to pharma which means you balance your portfolio between external oriented generics and CDMO and domestic oriented hospitals, diagnostics, and the likes because the earning season has been good, and it is a defensive sector. When FIIs come back, they will definitely allocate to pharma, except for what Trump does about pharma is a big question because there are two views about that, Ultimately the US government foots the healthcare bill and any tariff can mean that the US' subsidy goes up so the cost will have to be borne by the government and not by the consumers there. So, I would say it is better to hedge your bets in pharma, stick to that as a reasonable part of your allocation, but balance it between external oriented and domestic oriented so that you are protected in the event of some bad news, at least the domestics will come and support you.

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